Energy sector volatility has rattled financial markets. After quarters of neglect, oil hit the headlines with war, supply shocks, and the return of triple-digit prices per barrel.
However, amid a global scramble to secure supply, the companies that actually produce and transport oil are doing the opposite. They’re locking in profits at volumes rarely seen.
The result is a widening disconnect between physical players and financial capital, where one side insulates itself from uncertainty while the other is whipsawed by it. By insulating itself from uncertainty, producers become the protected class, leaving speculative capital to navigate the turbulent market.
The Producer’s Shield
Short positions in Brent crude by producers, merchants, and commercial users have climbed to a record $193 billion. According to the Kobeissi letter, that number is roughly double since the start of the year.
By selling futures at current levels, often above $100 per barrel, producers are effectively guaranteeing revenues regardless of where prices go next. It is, in effect, a winner’s hedge—locking in peak profitability even if the geopolitical risk premium fades overnight.
At the same time, supply dynamics are reinforcing this position. Global oil in transit has dropped by 270 million barrels in just three weeks, while commercial crude flows across OECD economies in Europe and the Americas have risen to their highest levels since at least 2024. The West appears unusually well-buffered from the immediate shock, with US oil giants like Exxon (NYSE:XOM) and Devon Energy (NYSE:DVN) set to achieve record cash flows.
The latter is particularly interesting owing to its pending merger with Coterra Energy. After the transaction’s close in Q2, Devon could have a notably higher dividend (a 31% increase to $0.315 per quarter) and a fresh $5 billion buyback plan.
Volatility Hits Wall Street
Meanwhile, the ongoing hurricane has made landfall in Lower Manhattan. Some of the largest Wall Street names posted steep losses as war-driven volatility whipsawed the market.
Furthermore, the fears made hedge funds pivot away from cyclical stocks—including energy, materials, and industrials—for nine consecutive weeks, flipping net positioning negative for the first time since mid-2025.
Increasingly, that repositioning is going through exchange-traded funds (ETFs) rather than individual equities. Kobeissi pointed out that ETFs now account for a record 37% of US trading volume, a 13-point jump since the start of 2025, amplifying moves as investors de-risk in bulk rather than selectively.
Enverus Touts “Higher for Longer”
Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR) expects Brent crude to average $95 per barrel through the remainder of 2026 and $100 in 2027, citing constrained flows through the Strait of Hormuz and a muted supply response.
“The world has an oil flow problem that is draining stocks,” said Al Salazar, EIR’s director of research.
Even at elevated prices, US producers are unlikely to significantly ramp up output, due to years of consolidation and capital discipline. Thus, the result might be a market where supply remains tight even as demand growth slows under the weight of higher prices.
Image: Shutterstock
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